FORGOTTEN WORLDS: From Atlantis To The X-Woman Of Siberia & The Hobbits Of Flores by Chouinard, Patrick

FORGOTTEN WORLDS: From Atlantis To The X-Woman Of Siberia & The Hobbits Of Flores by Chouinard, Patrick

2,000.00

An examination of the mythological, historical, and archaeological evidence for lost civilizations throughout the world.

--Explores
unexplained mysteries such as the Caucasian mummies of China, the
pyramids of Caral in Peru, and the genetically unique X-woman of
Siberia.

--Examines evidence of lost, ancient civilizations in
Asia, Europe, and the Americas, including extensive investigation into
Atlantis.

--Shows that Siberia and the Amazon may have been cradles of humanity before Africa.

Over
and over again, mainstream views of early history--which state that the
first civilizations arose around 3500 BCE--are plagued by evidence of
much older civilizations, evidence ranging from artifacts and
inexplicable remains to pyramids and ubiquitous myths that clearly speak
of great empires prior to the rise of the Sumerian city states and
pharaonic Egypt.

Viewing Atlantis and its many related myths as a
metaphor for a long-lost global civilization, Patrick Chouinard
explores the mythological, cultural, religious, and archaelogical
evidence for many forgotten civilizations in Europe, Asia, and the
Americas. He addresses unexplained mysteries from around the world, such
as Caucasian mummies found in China, the pyramids of Caral in Peru, the
hobbit remains on Flores Island, the giant heads of Easter Island, the
lost legacy of Lemuria, the ideology and occult mysticism behind Nazi
theory, and the genetically unique X-woman of Siberia. He also examines
evidence of ancient alien visits and other supernatural phenomena in the
distant past. Using recent archaeological findings, he shows that
Siberia and the Amazon may have been cradles of humanity millennia
before Africa. Sounding the call to continue searching ancient, remote,
and formerly forbidden regions for lost cultures and genetic root races,
Chouinard offers a new chronology for the emergence of human life and
civilization as well as a new mechanism for how and why societies and
species change over time. By finding lost peoples and their forgotten
worlds, we can truly begin to understand the human race and learn from
its long history.